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Texas Day by Day

September 20, 1967


Hurricane Beulah wracks Texas coast

On this day in 1967, Hurricane Beulah, the third largest hurricane of the twentieth century, struck South Texas. It battered the state for two days. The storm hit Brownsville with winds estimated at 140 miles an hour, moved northwest across South Texas to the vicinity of Alice, then turned southwest, crossed the Rio Grande between Zapata and Laredo, and finally blew itself out in Mexico. Tornadoes spawned by Beulah did extensive damage to South Texas and northeast Mexico. On September 28, President Johnson declared twenty-four counties in South Texas a disaster area. Official estimates in these counties set the number of dead at 18, the injured or sick at 9,000, and the number of homes destroyed or heavily damaged at 3,000. Property damage was estimated at $100 million, crop damage at $50 million. Some 300,000 people were evacuated during the storm and subsequent flooding.

Links to Related Handbook of Texas Online Articles
BROWNSVILLE, TX
WEATHER
HURRICANES

Other Texas Day by Day Articles for This Date
Baptist university opens in Dallas (1905)
Texan flies in first airship? (1865)


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